Merge branch 'doc-configure_file-output-location' into release

This commit is contained in:
Brad King 2015-02-12 16:22:15 -05:00
commit 481ec779ab
1 changed files with 92 additions and 27 deletions

View File

@ -9,38 +9,103 @@ Copy a file to another location and modify its contents.
[COPYONLY] [ESCAPE_QUOTES] [@ONLY] [COPYONLY] [ESCAPE_QUOTES] [@ONLY]
[NEWLINE_STYLE [UNIX|DOS|WIN32|LF|CRLF] ]) [NEWLINE_STYLE [UNIX|DOS|WIN32|LF|CRLF] ])
Copies a file <input> to file <output> and substitutes variable values Copies an ``<input>`` file to an ``<output>`` file and substitutes
referenced in the file content. If <input> is a relative path it is variable values referenced as ``@VAR@`` or ``${VAR}`` in the input
evaluated with respect to the current source directory. The <input> file content. Each variable reference will be replaced with the
must be a file, not a directory. If <output> is a relative path it is current value of the variable, or the empty string if the variable
evaluated with respect to the current binary directory. If <output> is not defined. Furthermore, input lines of the form::
names an existing directory the input file is placed in that directory
with its original name.
If the <input> file is modified the build system will re-run CMake to #cmakedefine VAR ...
will be replaced with either::
#define VAR ...
or::
/* #undef VAR */
depending on whether ``VAR`` is set in CMake to any value not considered
a false constant by the :command:`if` command. The "..." content on the
line after the variable name, if any, is processed as above.
Input file lines of the form ``#cmakedefine01 VAR`` will be replaced with
either ``#define VAR 1`` or ``#define VAR 0`` similarly.
If the input file is modified the build system will re-run CMake to
re-configure the file and generate the build system again. re-configure the file and generate the build system again.
This command replaces any variables in the input file referenced as The arguments are:
${VAR} or @VAR@ with their values as determined by CMake. If a
variable is not defined, it will be replaced with nothing. If
COPYONLY is specified, then no variable expansion will take place. If
ESCAPE_QUOTES is specified then any substituted quotes will be C-style
escaped. The file will be configured with the current values of CMake
variables. If @ONLY is specified, only variables of the form @VAR@
will be replaced and ${VAR} will be ignored. This is useful for
configuring scripts that use ${VAR}.
Input file lines of the form "#cmakedefine VAR ..." will be replaced ``<input>``
with either "#define VAR ..." or ``/* #undef VAR */`` depending on Path to the input file. A relative path is treated with respect to
whether VAR is set in CMake to any value not considered a false the value of :variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR`. The input path
constant by the if() command. (Content of "...", if any, is processed must be a file, not a directory.
as above.) Input file lines of the form "#cmakedefine01 VAR" will be
replaced with either "#define VAR 1" or "#define VAR 0" similarly.
With NEWLINE_STYLE the line ending could be adjusted: ``<output>``
Path to the output file or directory. A relative path is treated
with respect to the value of :variable:`CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR`.
If the path names an existing directory the output file is placed
in that directory with the same file name as the input file.
:: ``COPYONLY``
Copy the file without replacing any variable references or other
content. This option may not be used with ``NEWLINE_STYLE``.
'UNIX' or 'LF' for \n, 'DOS', 'WIN32' or 'CRLF' for \r\n. ``ESCAPE_QUOTES``
Escape any substituted quotes with backslashes (C-style).
COPYONLY must not be used with NEWLINE_STYLE. ``@ONLY``
Restrict variable replacement to references of the form ``@VAR@``.
This is useful for configuring scripts that use ``${VAR}`` syntax.
``NEWLINE_STYLE <style>``
Specify the newline style for the output file. Specify
``UNIX`` or ``LF`` for ``\n`` newlines, or specify
``DOS``, ``WIN32``, or ``CRLF`` for ``\r\n`` newlines.
This option may not be used with ``COPYONLY``.
Example
^^^^^^^
Consider a source tree containing a ``foo.h.in`` file:
.. code-block:: c
#cmakedefine FOO_ENABLE
#cmakedefine FOO_STRING "@FOO_STRING@"
An adjacent ``CMakeLists.txt`` may use ``configure_file`` to
configure the header:
.. code-block:: cmake
option(FOO_ENABLE "Enable Foo" ON)
if(FOO_ENABLE)
set(FOO_STRING "foo")
endif()
configure_file(foo.h.in foo.h @ONLY)
This creates a ``foo.h`` in the build directory corresponding to
this source directory. If the ``FOO_ENABLE`` option is on, the
configured file will contain:
.. code-block:: c
#define FOO_ENABLE
#define FOO_STRING "foo"
Otherwise it will contain:
.. code-block:: c
/* #undef FOO_ENABLE */
/* #undef FOO_STRING */
One may then use the :command:`include_directories` command to
specify the output directory as an include directory:
.. code-block:: cmake
include_directories(${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR})
so that sources may include the header as ``#include <foo.h>``.